318 INDEX. 



Cicada septendecim, the true appellation of our locusts, 76 



Clay; burning for manure, - 291 



Cleaveland, Parker; his letter on the season of 1816; 



and other important subjects, 192, 3, 4 



Clover seed ; Bennet's machine for sowing, - 44 



and plaster husbandry, its great advantages, 228 

 ICT* The practice of ploughing in clover, and 

 using plaster, has arrived, in some counties 

 of Virginia, to such perfection, as nearly to 

 supersede the necessity for dung. R. P. 

 Cockchaffer ; some account of it, - - - - 128 



Coates, John R. his communications on salt marsh, and 

 modes of cultivating, improving, and 

 reclaiming it, - 257 to 285, inclusive 



Comstock, Dr. Joseph ; culture of wheat and other crops, 



on land manured with sea-grass, 74 



Corn, Indian; culture of it, - - 166 



grows luxuriantly on ground liable to stunt 

 or sedge wheat, 20 



see Mr. Singleton's mode of culture, - 243 



Coxe, W. his account of Gloucester white apple, - 50 



Henry, on cut -worms, wild birds, Jones's wheat, 

 &c. - - •- - - 204, 5, 6 



Note thereon, - 206, 7 



Cow, Alderney ; account of one, ,.- - 155 



Cut-worms : holes near corn -hills trap them, - 221 



destroy clover, - . ib. 



caught in deep furrows, - - ib. 



a large moth is their parent, - - 223, 6 



instance of pertinacious industry to destroy 

 them, - - - - - 231 



D 



Dearborn, H. S. his account of the woad plant, 57 



Draveil plough, improved ; account of it, - - - 169 



E 



Eastburn, James ; on the improved Draveil plough, - 169 

 Fall ploughing ; accounts of it, pro and con, 232, 3, 4, 5 



